On Thursday, Idaho Senators Mike Crapo and Jim Risch demanded the Biden administration stop any eleventh-hour attempts to breach the lower Snake River dams.

 

“The incoming administration should be allowed the time and opportunity to carefully review and shape the management of the Columbia River System, including the lower Snake River dams.  The river system is the backbone of the Pacific Northwest, providing essential benefits to the region, including energy production, agricultural support, recreation, and transportation,” the letter from the senators stated.  “We remain deeply concerned that key stakeholders from energy, agriculture, transportation, and other critical sectors have been consistently left out of the decision-making process regarding the future of the Federal Columbia River Power System, especially in regard to the dams on the lower Snake River…This failure to engage with affected communities and industries not only undermines the principles of fair governance but also increases the risk for devastating economic and social consequences.”

 

The senators added the four hydroelectric dams on the lower Snake River provide multiple benefits to Idaho and the region, including:  

  • Transportation of agricultural products, including more than 15 million metric tons of wheat in 2020 with nearly 10% of all U.S. wheat moving out on the Snake River alone
  • $686 million in jobs and businesses associated with Idaho’s Port of Lewiston, the furthest inland port on the West Coast
  • 95% emission-free power portfolio generated by the Bonneville Power Administration, allowing small public utilities across the Northwest to lead in clean energy production
  • Clean, always-on energy that can uniquely keep the lights on during extreme weather events where relying on wind and solar would cause blackouts
  • Irrigation 

 

Idaho's two senators were joined by Wyoming's senators, Cynthia Lummis and John Barrasso, as well as Montana's Steve Daines.

 

Click Here to read the letter sent to Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm.

 

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